Gilley v. Wendy's, Inc.

723 So. 2d 517, 1998 WL 905343
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 9, 1998
Docket31,353-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 723 So. 2d 517 (Gilley v. Wendy's, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gilley v. Wendy's, Inc., 723 So. 2d 517, 1998 WL 905343 (La. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

723 So.2d 517 (1998)

Leon Craig GILLEY, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
WENDY'S, INC., and State Farm Insurance Company, Defendants-Appellees.

No. 31,353-CA.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

December 9, 1998.

*518 Myrt T. Hales, Jr., Rayville, Mack E. Barham, Robert E. Arceneaux, Gail N. Wise, New Orleans, Counsel for Plaintiff-Appellant.

Hudson, Potts & Bernstein, By Gordon L. James, Monroe, Counsel for Defendants-Appellees.

Before MARVIN, C.J., and HIGHTOWER and WILLIAMS, JJ.

MARVIN, C.J.

This appeal by plaintiff arises out of his action for slip and fall damages occurring in 1994 against a Wendy's restaurant in Monroe that was initially tried by a jury whose verdict was assailed as inconsistent by each litigant. Some 3½ months after the trial court granted a new trial in June 1997 on motions of plaintiff and defendants, the litigants stipulated they would waive trial by jury and submit the matter to the court for decision on the record and transcript of proceedings before the jury and on briefs to be filed within 30 days after the testimony had been transcribed, as if the matter "had been retried by the court."

After the court found plaintiff to have been impeached in several areas and unworthy of belief, the court signed a judgment dismissing plaintiff's demands on March 9, 1998.

In the motions for JNOV or new trial, each litigant contended the jury verdict [allocating fault 60 percent to Wendy's and assessing only medical special damages ($17,000) and no general damages] was inconsistent. Plaintiff now contends that the jury's inconsistent verdict was an error of law which could have been corrected by JNOV and that the trial court abused its discretion in granting a new trial. Plaintiff alternatively asserts that the trial court's factual findings after the new trial are clearly wrong.

We affirm.

FACTS

Plaintiff Gilley alleged that he slipped and fell on a recently mopped floor in the restroom of Wendy's restaurant on U.S. Hwy. 165 in Monroe on February 22, 1994. Gilley was on crutches at the time, having broken a bone in his left knee about February 8, 1994, while playing with his girlfriend's dog.

Gilley's family doctor in Mangham referred him to an orthopedic surgeon in Monroe, Dr. Douglas Brown, for treatment of the knee fracture, a comminuted compressed fracture of the lateral tibial plateau. On *519 February 11, 1994, Dr. Brown placed a compression bandage and an immobilizer or brace on the knee to reduce swelling and to restrict movement, instructing Gilley not to bear any weight on the left leg and to return for a follow-up visit in two weeks. Dr. Brown did not recommend surgery initially, explaining that he expected the fracture to heal on its own in about three months with the prescribed conservative treatment. According to Dr. Brown, Gilley was "not supposed to put any weight at all on the [left] leg" because any amount of weight-bearing could aggravate the injury.

Gilley's girlfriend testified that during this period of some two weeks between Gilley's initial injury and the alleged fall at Wendy's, Gilley used his crutches "a good bit" but "not constantly[.] ... Not as much as I wanted him to. He ... tried not to use them but he had to use them."

Gilley claimed he reinjured his left knee in the fall in the Wendy's restroom on February 22, but gave varying accounts of how the second injury occurred. The restroom's tile floor had just been mopped and was still wet, by all accounts. The employee who mopped the floor. Lonnie Cross, had failed to display the store's caution or warning sign, as required by company procedure. Gilley said he "bumped the door open" as he entered the restroom on his crutches, wearing the knee brace on his left knee. On direct examination at trial, Gilley testified:

... I went to put the crutches down to ... grab for the door [to the commode stall]. The floor was wet and the crutches slipped out from under me, you know, not knowing that it was wet.... [T]he [entrance] door [to the restroom] opened inward ... [and] when I fell ... the door closed in behind me....
Q. Did you fall all the way to the floor?
A. Yes, I did.
Q. Did your knee hit the floor?
A. Yes.

(Our emphasis and brackets.)

On cross-examination, Gilley said, "I fell towards my right onto the floor." After affirmatively stating that "both knees hit the floor," Gilley quickly equivocated by explaining, "I'm presuming they both did[.]" Gilley was then asked about the statement he had given to a claims adjuster for Wendy's liability insurer, a co-defendant, shortly after the incident in which he apparently said that his "right knee fell and hit the floor," his "left foot hit [his] right foot" and his left knee "never hit [the ground]." At trial, Gilley said, "I was probably meaning [my left knee] never hit my [right] knee." Our brackets. Gilley's statement to the adjuster was not introduced in evidence.

No one witnessed Gilley's fall. Gilley said he was able to get up by himself, notwithstanding his testimony that the pain in his knee intensified from "minor aches" before the restroom fall to "kind of like a Mack truck hit me ... as soon as I fell."

After exiting the restroom, Gilley told the store's cashier that he had fallen in the restroom and "they needed to have it mopped." The cashier recalled Gilley as having said, "Somebody needs to go in that bathroom because I just slipped and fell on my butt." Our emphasis. Gilley did not tell the cashier he was hurt and did not say he had fallen on his injured knee. He ordered a meal and sat down at a table to eat. Another Wendy's employee, seeing that Gilley was on crutches, carried his tray to the table for him.

The cashier sent Cross back to the restroom to remop the floor. Cross did not find any standing water on the floor but described the floor as "slippery" from the recent mopping. He observed a white "skid mark" on the tan floor in front of the sink, "like ... when you fall down," but the mark was not in the entranceway to the restroom, the area where Gilley claimed to have fallen. Cross estimated the skid mark was between one and three feet long and "pretty wide." Cross remopped the floor and displayed the caution sign.

Gilley testified he ate only "a few bites" of his meal. Before leaving the restaurant, he conversed with another restaurant patron whom he did not know, Eddie Marshall. Gilley told Marshall he had fallen on the wet floor in the restroom and asked Marshall to accompany him to the restroom to look at the floor. Estimating that the two entered the *520 restroom about 15 minutes after he fell, Gilley said he was "shocked" to see that the floor was dry. According to Marshall, however, Gilley knew that a store employee "went in there to mop it" after Gilley reported the fall, telling Marshall the floor under the sink had been wet before. Marshall did not recall Gilley saying he had been injured in the fall or complaining of any pain.

Gilley testified at trial that it was "almost dark" when he arrived at Wendy's on February 22. He said "it had to be around 5:00," more than two hours earlier than his initial estimate of 7:00 or 7:30 p.m. and at least an hour earlier than his later pre-trial estimate of 6:00 or 6:30 p.m. According to Wendy's payroll records, the cashier and Lonnie Cross worked the shift that ended at 5:00 p.m. that day, respectively clocking out at 5:02 and 5:18 p.m. Gilley explained his varying time estimates by saying, "I ...

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Bluebook (online)
723 So. 2d 517, 1998 WL 905343, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilley-v-wendys-inc-lactapp-1998.